Wednesday, April 1, 2026
Spectral flow cytometry panel identifies hematopoietic lineages in mouse bone marrow models
Photo by Marcel Strauß / Unsplash

Spectral flow cytometry panel identifies hematopoietic lineages in mouse bone marrow models

Key Takeaway
Note: This is a preclinical mouse study describing a new laboratory analysis method.

This preclinical methodology study designed and validated a 19-marker spectral flow cytometry panel for analyzing mouse bone marrow. The panel aimed to simultaneously identify hematopoietic stem cells, progenitor cells, and mature lineages, comparing its capabilities to multiple conventional panels. The study used samples from standard, aged, and β-thalassemic mouse models, though the exact sample size was not reported.

The panel accurately detected long-term and short-term hematopoietic stem cells, multipotent progenitors, common myeloid and lymphoid progenitors, and erythroid populations from proerythroblasts to reticulocytes. In validation studies, the panel clearly detected alterations in hematopoiesis in aged mice and erythropoiesis alterations in β-thalassemic mice. No specific effect sizes, absolute numbers, or statistical measures were reported for these findings. Safety and tolerability data were not reported, as this was a methodological study of an analytical technique.

Key limitations include its preclinical nature, exclusive use of mouse models, and absence of human data. The authors describe the panel as a robust and flexible tool suitable for basic research and translational studies. Its direct clinical relevance and therapeutic efficacy should not be overstated. This work provides a methodological advance for laboratory research but does not constitute evidence for clinical application.

View Original Abstract ↓
Hematopoiesis occurs in the bone marrow of adult mammals and is supported by hematopoietic stem cells that sustain lifelong blood cell production. Pathological conditions can disrupt HSC differentiation, causing anemia, immunodeficiency, and other cytopenias. Therefore, precise and simultaneous identification of hematopoietic populations from stem to mature cells is essential for understanding disease mechanisms and developing targeted therapies. In order to study these alterations, flow cytometry is generally the reference technique. However, most cytometry panels are designed to study a specific population, leaving out potential discoveries on other populations from the same microenvironment. Here we present the design of a 19-marker spectral flow cytometry panel capable of simultaneously identifying HSPCs, erythroid, myeloid and lymphoid cells within a single murine bone marrow sample. This integrated approach replaces multiple conventional panels and enables comprehensive mapping of hematopoietic differentiation from a single assay. Validation confirmed accurate detection of long-term and short-term HSCs, multipotent progenitors, common myeloid and lymphoid progenitors, and erythroid populations from proerythroblasts to reticulocytes. UMAP visualization captured the continuous trajectory of differentiation. We validated our method on aged and β-thalassemic mouse models showing a clear detection of hematopoiesis and erythropoiesis alterations respectively. This panel provides a robust and flexible tool suitable for both basic research and translational studies.